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REAL-PRINCESS COMES TO AMUSE BLASE SET
WITH ORIENTAL DANCES
THE DAY
BOOK
An Adless DdilyJNetvspaper,
' N. D. Cochran, ggBg", Tel. Monroe 353. ; i
Editor and Publisher. 0Illir Automatic 51-422.
500 South Peoria St. " 398 . By Mail, 50 Cents a Month.' i
VOL. 2, NO. 287 . Chicago, Wednesday, Sept. 3, 1 91 3
ONE CENT
IS WM. RANDOLPH HEARST A FRIEND
OF ORGANIZED LADOR? .
'Jas. W. Cline Discusses This Question In the September
Issue of The Blacksmiths' Journal He Says jHearst
Is Trying to "Fool All the People All the Time." ' ,
'J as. W, Kline is president of 'the International
Brotherhood of Blacksmiths and Helpers and editor of
The Blacksmiths' Journal, the official organ of the Black
smiths, published in Chicago monthly. Following is his
article, Editor Day Book,
Hearst is not big enough to fool all the working men all the time. He
'seems to be big enough,, however, to fool some of the" union men all the
time. Whether it is on account of his mental "ability that he can do it, or
whether on account of the working men's mental deficiency that allows him
to do it, is a question. Trades unionists who have been in the game a "rea
sonable length of time, and have not noticed the political and industrial
somersaults Mr. Hearst has .made, must be blind indeed. . The Examiner
and American weyerboth established in Chicago with the support and co
operation of the union men. In San Francisco Mr. Hearst had the support
of men of laTaor. In Los Angeles the .Examiner, after months of -Bard work
by Mr. Hearst and assisted by the wage earner, -was "set afloat
.Mr. Hearst was at that time looked up to hy some as a champion of
the rights of workmgmen. ' His efforts a few years ago, in expdsingthe
slaving conditions in the, coalmines of the East, and the over-greedy mine
owners, drewlorth appla'use'from-rgpiEmBdthelrynlpatfs.
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